Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 26 Aug 1937, 2, p. 6

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[ + * Deliciously Simple . The careful planning makes all the ‘difference, A.qelicious but simple menu ‘that can be served easily is only half the story..The other. half is in; the selection of accessories that will be gracicus ‘but yet uncomplicating. For iwe think that it‘s as important to $c, unless® careful planning in adâ€" vance is done, cutdoor dining is likely to be a lot of extra work. The first thing of course is to have family coâ€" operation in fetching and carrying, but if you‘re a clever lady, you have that already. Â¥# It‘s mighty easy to talk about the remantic allure cf eating in an orchard,‘ but what about the lady who had to do | the work? Of course in the novels,! there‘s always a maid or man in uniâ€" / form at beck and call. BRut life for t:heI most of us is without benefit of serâ€" and so turns out to be as pleaâ€" segnt and attractive as we make it by our own personal efforts. Fish net dyed in a crisp deep colour for summer set outdoors. This one has the fith net dved in Aaar Many New Table Accessories Are Designed For Informal Outdoor Occaswns â€"Suggestions For Setting the Table and Planning the Service. SETTING THE SCENE FOR DINING OUT OF DOORS When you see a motorist driving in a manner dangerous to the public, take his number, make a careful note of the actual time and place, and when you reach your destination write to the Motor Vehicles . Branch, That is precigely what is going on in Ontario this year. Nearly 800 people will be killed on‘our highways. Nearly 14,000 will be injured â€"many of them mppled many of them suffering almost unbearable pain. Death and MOTORISTS: WE ASK YOUR HELP! If every human life in a village of 800 people in the Province of Ontario were snuffed out in one day, newsâ€" papers throughout the entire world would carry the story of the ghastly tragedy. If one of your loved onesâ€"or even a friendâ€"were a victim, it would become quite a grievous, horrible, personal loss ! , °S CO‘our for summer . use makes a cool lookirg practical covering ftor a table has the fish net dyed in deep blue and the settings emphasize blues, reds and whites., PLEASANT HoMEs Mexican Motifs This season the blues seem to be takâ€" ing all honors in styles for outdoor table settings. And Mexico is supplyâ€" ing the brightest ideas for open air dining. These two style currents get together. in. mapy .a.smart scene we‘ve seen. For there‘s a good deal of blue and white Mexican pottery about now â€"it‘s striking against a solid blue cloth Tco often a supper in the yard means that all bars are down and picnic rules are in order. That‘s fun for a change tut not if you want to make this most delightful of home festivities a habit instead of an occrasion. For a steady diet you‘ll want a table and seats of scme kind ... outdogorish pottery and linen ....... a leisurely mood. serve beauty as vitamines, and the pictures of the home we create depends cn just such details as the setting of a table. But that can be done in one or two trips from the kitchen just as well as in twenty. by Elizabeth MacRea Boykin HIGHWAYS ! wa. «ate w We‘ve found blue notes in other potâ€" tery besides Mexican. A very deep solid blue in a dull mat glaze ware is new | in heavy provincial French pott.ery This should influence informal ware in seasons to come. It is perfectly swell on a bare white wood tableé, orâ€" on plaid or raffia mats. Watch also for square plates in heayy peasant type of pottery, because they‘re appearing in important exhibitions and promise to make their way in the inâ€" fcrmal world. Lots of Mexican serape type ‘of deâ€" signs are being adopted for table runâ€" ners, and there are woven cottons from that sunny country that we find charmâ€" ing with Mexican pottery and that grand dark Mexican gloss. These runâ€" ners also fraternize gayly with proâ€" vincial pottery of other nationalities, toc. with a centerpiece featuring yellow and that goes for anything from lemons to snapdragons! RECKLES§ DRIYVERS BEWARE ! Motoflstahavebeenrequestedtobecourtaomon the road but the death toll mounts at an appalling rate. This Departâ€" ment, with the aid of our internationally famous police force and publicspirited citizens, intends to put reckless drivers off the road ! You miust stop cutting in, passing on hills and curves, crowding, recing, taking chances. Unless you have regard for the safety and convenience of other users of our highways you will soon find yourself in serious trouble. untold suffering stalk our ,hiéhways and this must stop! to use sheer easyâ€"toâ€"launder dress faâ€" brics for summer table cloths tooâ€"the south sea florals, for instahce, as well as the pleasant sprigged cottons. Better For all over cloths, fish net is popuâ€" lar because it washes so easily and looks so cool and fresh. And it‘s fun As for linen, just about anything goes except white damask. And we‘d suggest thinking more than twice about your laundering facilities before you ccmmit yourself to a full sized cloth when thg:re are so many lovely doilie sets that are all set for good times, so ‘gay apd atarched looking are â€"they. cific colors and very fine shaves are responsible, plus the amijable serenity that these pieces seem to have. In short they manage to be modern beâ€" ing Jittery. Pottery plates with fruits or vege? tablesâ€"for their designs are quite someâ€" thing too for a table out of doors. And don‘t forget how cool and crisp glass ,Fh\ten re for the cutdoors, especially sea green cor ice blue. h i ’ The Silver Standard , Your Sunday silver is too nice for the yard and the kitchen silver is enâ€" tirely too much a part of the dgily grind. Most decidedly something gay is in order for cutdoor diningâ€"even if you can cnly afford cheap red handled knives and forks, get them for your ensemble. But if you‘re feeling m little flusher, consider that new plastis handâ€" led cutlery, the kind with transparent handles. Very swish and new looking for an informal cccasion and practlcal.l tC z. * SEa e wS 4 448 48 4 thK. 4A “C nmlng m table iashionsâ€"the clear Paâ€" A bright printed tablecloth inâ€"shades of green and covered soup bowls in light green are cool and refreshâ€" ing looking for a gatrden: table of rattan with chairs to match. ONTARIO DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS Motor Vehicies Branch or you can do without a tablecloth entirely if the table top is good enough to be seen. Then use very bright solid cclor napkins fringed all round. On Speakting Terms Wis think the fable should be on speaking terms with the house. That‘s why we like a white painted table with a white house, though white furniture goes equally well with certain. other types of houses too. The stores have perfectly lovely white tables in both: wood and metal, round one with umâ€" brellas up their middles, cbhlong ones withouft umbrellas but with glass tops. Or if ~you can‘t finance anything so fancy as that, maybke the man of the house can maks a table with plain bcards and a pair of saw horses....... weight the hems to kgep the"wmd from flipping them up inopportunely. "Hair tonics pfoclaimed to remedy barren pates are <« merely harmless hoaxes," he added. "It is with the upâ€" scrupulous manufacturer of soâ€"called cancer cures and other quackeries that are not only unavailing but dangerous that the bureau of investigation M its efforts." "If they remove freckles, they must remove the outer layer of the skin, and many contain caustics," he cauâ€" ticned. "Better to have freckles than to have scars." "Tonics may create a_little fuzz, but nothing more," he said in an interview. Dr. Clancy also dropped a word of warning to women about ‘"guaranteed" freckle removers. When hair is gone, it‘s gone, said Dr. Frank J. Clancy, of Chicago, director of the association‘s board of investiâ€" gaticn. The American Medical Assoziation‘s "director of dsbunking" told baldâ€" headed men at Spskane, Washington. this week, that there is just nothing they can do about it. If you have an crchard or an arbor, count your blessings. If you haven‘t then select your bast tree. But glorify whatever spot you choose.....keep‘ a velvety lawn there if possible, or else have a flagstone terrace effect. Plan planting arcund it so that there‘ll be somcthing in blcom all summer, and some chairs to stretch out in and count stars on summer nights. Not a Hair of Hope Hel% Out for the Baidheaded (Copyright, 937, by Elizabeth McRae Boykin.) be you can divide the family in shifts â€"Gne or two helpers eath time to do the carrying. _If you are, don‘t forget these post scripts a‘s you do your planning ahead: Keep servicse as well as menu informal ....... no courses that take extra serving dishes (except dessert). Extra size dinâ€" ner plates of bright primitive pottery are the ideal choice for individual helpâ€" ingsâ€"these to hold the salad greens alcng with the main part of the meal. And one very big platter to hold the entire repertoire of a cold supper. If your family is going to demand someâ€" thing hot, consider the possibilities of the old time soup tureen which is comâ€" ing back into fashion and available in simple but colorful pottery. Then big cups and big tumblers to save too many returns. And a very big pitcher and a tig coffee or tea pot. Plenty of big trays to get everything qut in a mum of tripsâ€"some individual trays too if it‘s to be a lap supper. And mayâ€" Nothing Nicer We hope you‘re convinced by now that nothing is nicer in fine weather than to eat in your own back yard. you like the substantial heartiness of rattanâ€"that to comes in dining tables and chairs. If you‘re a modern soul, no doubt ncthing but chromium and fabricoid will make you happy. There‘s plenty of it to chosse from ....... all very, very comâ€" fcrtable and smart looking. Or maybe If yours isn‘t the kind of house that will go so well with white table and chairs, consider the possibilities of that everyâ€"day Chinese pseel furniture. Table and chairs of that.would be decorative, comfortable yet ever so. reasonable in ecst, and will stand the weather too. Why couldn‘t they go stylish with a coat of white paint? Chairs add a lot of comfort to the occasion, and we advise them if they‘re at all possible. But we warn youâ€"these marvelously spring metal chairs will keep the gang sitting around the table till midnight if you don‘t show them in. If you can‘t chairs, benches will do. under way and values of $10 have been indicated 200 feet below the bottom level. Preparations are being made to sink a winze to 700 feet to open up this cre. At a later date the winze may be put up to surface to form a second opâ€" erating sheft. About 20000 tons of ore are in sight above the §00â€"foot ievel, with grade of around $13 per ton. Fiftyâ€"ton mill is presently being inâ€" stalled and will be in operation this fall. baft has been sunk to 500 feet, with levels opened at 300, 400 and 500 feet, with the main orebady extending through these levels, says J. H. Colvilie, consulting engineer. Mine is in a poâ€" Annual report of Raven River Goid Mines, Larder Lake area, for the year ended May 31, 1937, shows current asâ€" sets of $4397, of which $2230 is cash, compared with current liabilities of $10,214. Fixed assets total $46,604, while deferred development and administraâ€" tion expenses, including expenditures made prior to incorporation of comâ€" pany, are carried at $29,337. There are 984403 shares issued out of 2,500,000 Time for reforestation _ Proposals from several organizations that the Ontario Government underâ€" take a provinceâ€"wide scheme of reforâ€" estation, with exâ€"servicemen being emâ€" ployed, were favoured in prm"lple by Premier Hepbum He said the time "is ripe" for a reâ€" forestation scheme, "but I believe it is more particularly necessary in Northâ€" ern Ontario where we are beginning to utilize our forest resources than in Old Ontario.‘" The Premier said in any such scheme as many exâ€"service men as possible would he employed. Raven River Mine, Larder Lake, Soon to Produce _ Premier Hepburn first is to call a conference Oof al) the provinces, but if for any reason this fails to produce the desired results, then, the premier says, Ontario will embark dm a scheme of its own. The Premier continued: "We have already made a study of the sitâ€" uation but our action was delayed pendâ€" ing the decision of the Privy Council with regard to the Bennétt legislation. Up to Provinces "Now. since the federal legislation has heen ryled to be ultra vires it is up to the provinces to act," said Mr. Hspburn. Coâ€"operation of all provinces would be essentia) or indigent residents would flock to the province in which an unâ€" employment â€" insurance was in effect, he believed. getting along we)ll. At the same time the coupntry is by no means ruined as some foretold. It is a fact that all these plans may be carried too far or misapâ€" plied but there is the foundation of sense and justice and foresight in them and the people of Canada should be able to make them work. the ordingry man in Britain.. There may have been abuses, but the chances are that these have been greatly exagâ€" gerated. A)}l returning from the Old Country in â€"resent times have the same story to tellâ€"apparent prosperity, with most people evidently enjoying life and ujnemployment insyrance. There will accordingly ‘he general approval of the idea of a conference between the proâ€" vinces with a view to finding a comâ€" mon plan to méet the situation. After all is said and done, unemployment inâ€" surange has worked to the benefit of very tough travelling in Qntario. At the least it must be admitted that a general unemployment scheme will work much more smoothly than one undertaken by any one province. This was found to be the case in the old age penslons case, and it is likely to be still: more notigeable in the matter of P remier Hepburn Anâ€" nounces Plans After Preâ€" liminary Mention by Hon. Peter Heenan. : With Hon. Mr. Hepburn and other members of the Gabinet on the platâ€" form At the time, Hon. Peter Heenan last week at a big Liberal rally suggestâ€" ed that the Ontario Government was Planning to introduce a form of unemâ€" pleyment insyrance. When he called attention to the fact that the premier was smiling, Hon. Mr. Hepburn made remark to the effect that the*Honorable Petor knew what he was talking about. Fcllcwing un his brief suggestion of an unempleyment insurgnce scheme for Ontario Premier Hepbyrn this week made more forms] announcement in the matter. He said at Toronto on Monâ€" day that an unemployment jnsurance programme will be part of the Liberal election platform this election. If his administration is returned to power, says Premier Hepbyrn, he will immeâ€" diately ea)l e conference with other provineesâ€"to devise uniform unemployâ€" ment schemes. Mast people who have ecnsidered the question are likely to agree that it is practically a vital neâ€" cessity to have similer legislation in all provinces or the scheme will have Planning Insur for the Unemploy immediately supply ore for

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